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  1. Rana's Wedding

    Rana's Wedding

    2003 · Drama · 1h 30m

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  1. Rana's Wedding, also known as Jerusalem, Another Day (Arabic, القدس في يوم آخر ), is a Palestinian film released in 2002. It was produced in partnership with the Netherlands and funded by the Palestinian Film Foundation. The film was directed by Palestinian director Hany Abu-Assad in Jerusalem.

    • Bero Beyer and George Ibrahim
    • Clara Khoury, Khalifa Natour and Ismael Dabbagh
  2. Jan 30, 2004 · Rana (Clara Khoury) is a Palestinian who is 17; her lover Khalil (Khalifa Natour), a theater director, seems to be around 40. Although her father has grave doubts about their marriage, they cite Islamic law which allows them to wed if they inform the father in the presence of a registrar.

  3. A poignant drama that offers a look at what it is like to live in occupied Palestine. One morning, spirited Rana (Clara Khoury), a Palestinian teenager living in Jerusalem, receives a startling...

    • (21)
    • Clara Khoury
    • Hany Abu-Assad
    • Drama
  4. Apr 14, 2010 · Director: Hany Abu-AssadCo-presented with Toronto Human Rights Watch Film Festival and TPFF '09Shooting on location in East Jerusalem, Ramallah and at checkp...

    • Apr 14, 2010
    • 25.2K
    • Toronto Palestine Film Festival
  5. Not rated, 90 minutes. Hany Abu-Assad's somber film ''Rana's Wedding'' builds considerable suspense as it follows the quest of Rana (Clara Khoury), a feisty young Palestinian woman living in...

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  7. Aug 7, 2003 · 1h 30m. IMDb RATING. 6.5 /10. 511. YOUR RATING. Rate. Drama Comedy. About a Palestinian girl of 17 who wants to get married to the man of her own choosing. Rana wakes up one morning to an ultimatum delivered by her father: she must either choose a husband from a preselected list of men, or she must leave Palestine for Egypt with her father by 4 ...

  8. Aug 22, 2003 · Rana's Wedding - Metacritic. 2003. Unrated. Arab Film Distribution. 1 h 30 m. Summary Palestinian director Hany Abu-Assad's timely feature explores love among the ruins of an occupied territory and is the winner of the Human Rights Watch International Film Festival's 2003 Nestor Almendros Prize for courage in filmmaking. (Arab Film Distribution)

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